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Attention and Scene Perception

Attention and Scene Perception. Introduction. Attention: Any of the very large set of selective processes in the brain

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Attention and Scene Perception

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  1. Attention and Scene Perception

  2. Introduction Attention: Any of the very large set of selective processes in the brain • To deal with the impossibility of handling all inputs at once, the nervous system has evolved mechanisms that are able to restrict processing to a subset of things, places, ideas, or moments in time Selective attention: The form of attention involved when processing is restricted to a subset of the possible stimuli

  3. Introduction Varieties of Attention • External: Attending to stimuli in the world • Internal: Attending to one line of thought over another or selecting one response over another • Overt: Directing a sense organ toward a stimulus, like pointing your eyes or turningyour head • Covert: Attending without giving an outward sign you are doing so • Divided: Splitting attention between two different stimuli • Sustained: Continuously monitoring some stimulus

  4. Figure 7.1 Even though the letters are big enough to resolve while looking at the Xs, we simply cannot read the left-hand and right-hand sentences at the same time

  5. Figure 7.2 Search for the unicorn in this piece of a “Where’s Waldo?” picture

  6. Selection in Space Reaction time (RT): A measure of the time from the onset of a stimulus to a response Cue: A stimulus that might indicate where (or what) a subsequent stimulus will be • Cues can be valid (correct information), invalid (incorrect), or neutral (uninformative) Stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA): The time between the onset of one stimulus and the onset of another

  7. Selection in Space Cueing as a tool for examining attention • Simple probe detection experiment • Posner cueing paradigm • Cues can be valid or invalid • RTs are shorter on valid cue trials • RTs are longer on invalid cue trials

  8. Figure 7.3 The Posner cueing paradigm (Part 1)

  9. Figure 7.3 The Posner cueing paradigm (Part 2)

  10. Figure 7.3 The Posner cueing paradigm (Part 3)

  11. Figure 7.4 The effect of a cue develops over time

  12. Selection in Space Theories of Attention • “Spotlight”model: Attention is restricted in space and moves from one point to the next. Areas within the spotlight receive extra processing • “Zoom lens”model: The attended region can grow or shrink depending on the size of the area to be processed

  13. Visual Search Visual search: Looking for a target in a display containing distracting elements • Examples: Finding your car in a parking lot or a friend in a crowd Target: The goal of a visual search Distractor: In visual search, any stimulus other than thetarget Set size: The number of items in a visual search display

  14. Visual Search The efficiency of visual search is the average increase in RT for each item added to the display • Measured in terms of search slope, or ms/item • The larger the search slope (more ms/item), the less efficient the search • Some searches are efficient and have small slopes • Some searches are inefficient and have large slopes

  15. Figure 7.6 Laboratory visual search tasks

  16. Visual Search Feature searches are efficient • Feature search: Search for a target defined by a single attribute,such as a salient color or orientation • Salience: The vividness of a stimulus relative to its neighbors • Parallel: In visual attention, referring to the processing of multiple stimuli at the same time

  17. Visual Search Many searches are inefficient • Serial self-terminating search: A search from item to item, ending when a target is found

  18. Visual Search In real-world searches, basic features guide visual search • Guided search: Attention is restricted to a subset of possible items based on information about the item’s basic features (e.g., color or shape) • Conjunction search: Search for a target defined by the presence of two or more attributes • No single feature defines the target • Defined by the co-occurrence of two or more features

  19. Figure 7.9 A real-world conjunction search

  20. Visual Search In real-world searches, the real world guides visual search • Scene-based guidance: Information in our understanding of scenes that helps us find specific objects in scenes • For instance, a mug will typically be found on a horizontal surface and a picture will typically be found on a vertical surface

  21. Figure 7.11 Search for arbitrary objects is not very efficient

  22. Figure 7.12 Scene-based guidance would help you find the faucet in this scene

  23. Visual Search The binding problem: The challenge of tying different attributes of visual stimuli, which are handled by different brain circuits, to the appropriate object so we perceive a unified object • Example: A vertical red bar moving to the right • Color, motion, and orientation are represented by separate neurons • How do we combine these features when perceiving the bar?

  24. Figure 7.13 A conjunction search with a binding problem

  25. Visual Search Feature integration theory: Treisman’s theory of visual attention, which holds that a limited set of basic features can be processed in parallel preattentively, but that other properties, including the correct binding of features to objects, require attention • Preattentive stage: The processing of a stimulus that occurs before selective attention is deployed to that stimulus

  26. Visual Search Is there any evidence that features are represented independently of each other and need to be bound together? Yes. Illusory conjunction: An erroneous combination of two features in a visual scene • Example: Seeing a red X when the display contains red letters and Xs but no red Xs • Illusory conjunctions provide evidence that some features are represented independently and must be correctly bound together with attention

  27. Figure 7.14 Illusory conjunctions

  28. Attending in Time: RSVP and the Attentional Blink Rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP): An experimental procedure in which stimuli appear in a stream at one location (typically the point of fixation) at a rapid rate (typically about eight per second) • RSVP is used to study the temporal dynamics of visual attention

  29. Attending in Time: RSVP and the Attentional Blink Attentionalblink: The difficulty in perceiving and responding to the second of two target stimuli amid a RSVP stream of distracting stimuli • The second target is often missed if it appears within 200 to 500 ms of the first target Green and Bavelier (2003) reported that people who play first-person shooter video games have a reduced attentional blink • This suggests that visual attention performance can be improved with practice

  30. Figure 7.15 The attentional blink (AB) in video game and non–video game players (Part 1)

  31. Figure 7.15 The attentional blink (AB) in video game and non–video game players (Part 2)

  32. Figure 7.16 Marvin Chun’s fishing metaphor for attentional blink

  33. Attending in Time: RSVP and the Attentional Blink Repetition blindness: A failure to detect the second occurrence of a letter, word, or picture in a RSVP stream of stimuli • The second occurrence is often missed when it appears within 200 to 500 ms of the first occurrence • This phenomenon is similar to the attentional blink but involves the inability to detect the same target if it appears twice

  34. The Physiological Basis of Attention How mightattention work, in terms of neuralactivity? Three ways responses of a cell could be changedby attention: • Response enhancement • Sharper tuning • Altered tuning

  35. Figure 7.21 Three ways that the response of a cell could be changed as a result of attention

  36. The Physiological Basis of Attention Attention could enhance neural activity • Attention to a specific part of the visual field causes neurons coding those locations to have increased activity • This increased activation has been detected using fMRI technology

  37. Figure 7.17 Spotlights of attention in the human brain

  38. The Physiological Basis of Attention Attention could enhance the processing of a specific type of stimulus • Fusiform face area(FFA): An area in the fusiform gyrus of human extrastriate cortex thatresponds preferentially to faces according to fMRI studies • Parahippocampal place area(PPA): A region of cortex in the temporal lobe of humans that appears to respond strongly to images of places (as opposed to isolated objects)

  39. Figure 7.20 These images combine faces and houses

  40. Figure 7.19 Functional MRI reveals that different pieces of the cortex are activated by faces and by places

  41. The Physiological Basis of Attention Attention could alter the tuning of a neural receptive field • Receptive fields of neurons are not completely fixed and can change in response to attentional demands

  42. Figure 7.22 Each of these images is a map of part of the visual field

  43. Disorders of VisualAttention Visual field defect: A portion of the visual field with no vision or with abnormal vision, typically resulting from damage to the visual nervous system Parietal lobe: In each cerebral hemisphere, a lobe that lies toward the top of the brain between the frontal and occipital lobes • Damage to the parietal lobe can cause a visual field defect such that one side of the world is not attended to

  44. The Physiological Basis of Attention Neglect: In visual attention, the inability to attend to or respond to stimuli in the contralesional visual field • Typically, neglect of the left visual field after damage to the right parietal lobe Contralesional field: The visual field on the side opposite a brain lesion • For example, points to the left of fixation arecontralesional to damage to the right hemisphere of the brain Ipsilesional field: The visual field on the same side as a brain lesion

  45. Figure 7.23 Five images through the brain of a neglect patient (viewed as though from above)

  46. Figure 7.24 A neglect patient might produce this sort of result if asked to cross out all the lines

  47. Figure 7.25 In copying a drawing like the one in (a), a neglect patient often omits one side of the object, as in (b)

  48. The Physiological Basis of Attention Attention can be object-based • Evidence from neglect patients indicates that they sometimes neglect one side of an object rather than one side of the visual field

  49. Figure 7.26 Tipper and Behrmann’s (1996) experiment

  50. The Physiological Basis of Attention Extinction: In visual attention, the inability to perceive a stimulus to one side of the point of fixation (e.g., to the right) in the presence of another stimulus, typically in a comparable position in the other visual field (e.g., on the left side)

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